Distraught protagonist Sweety, played by actress Sonam Kapoor Ahuja,
explains to her besotted male admirer that she is in love with another
woman.

The film’s writer, Gazal Dhaliwal, has seen the film four times at
cinemas in India after it was released on Feb. 1, and at each screening
saw up to 10 couples or families leave the theatre as Sweety’s struggle
for acceptance took centre stage.

“People are only used to watching homosexual content in the context
of comedy or in scenes that make a mockery of homosexual characters,”
said Dhaliwal, a trans woman who describes the film as
semi-autobiographical.

“In this film, we were asking them to pause, think, introspect their
own behaviour. Clearly we have a long way to go, and many more stories
to tell before people become comfortable,” she told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation.

Since India legalised gay sex in September last year, depictions of
LGBT+ people on Indian television have improved, shifting from mocking
stereotypes to including gay men on dating shows and drag queens in a
singing competition.

Trailblazing political and legal decisions are also chipping away at
prejudice and Dhaliwal’s film has been hailed by the LGBT+ community as a
Bollywood game-changer.

“I can’t believe what I saw,” was among the string of complimentary
tweets that equal rights campaigner Harish Iyer posted in praise of “Ek
Ladki…” minutes after he watched the film.

FEAR

Bollywood has a massive following among LGBT+ people but has never
represented them accurately on screen, said Dhaliwal who grew up
watching transgender characters always portrayed as men “who liked to
dress up as girls and attract straight men and sleep with men”.

“It used to make me feel that this is how people would look at me
when I came out. It instilled a fear … is this how I will be
perceived?” she said.

Born as a boy, Dhaliwal has spoken on public platforms about being
mocked in school for her feminine traits, her struggle to behave like a
man, running away from home, and returning to her supportive parents.

“The LGBT community is one of the most marginalised and discriminated
community in our country and just because they are not comfortable with
their bodies or attracted to the same sex doesn’t make them less
human,” Dhaliwal said.

The writer underwent sex reassignment surgery over a decade ago after
which her parents visited all their neighbours in the northern town of
Patiala and told people about Dhaliwal’s sex transition and asked them
to address her accordingly.

As a chemical engineer pursuing a dream to write Bollywood scripts,
Dhaliwal said her latest film was meant to be an adaption of P.G.
Wodehouse’s “A Damsel in Distress” that she turned into an LGBT+ story.

“I have lived this life. I felt responsible to tell this story at
some point,” she said, adding that the film may provide comfort to
children who are living conflicted lives to make them feel that “they
are not alone, there is hope”.

“This is Bollywood’s first step out of the closet,” she said. “I hope future films now don’t push us back into the closet.”